2,335 research outputs found

    Efeito de Embalagens e do tratamento com fungicida na qualidade de sementes de soja armazenadas.

    Get PDF
    Este trabalho objetivou avaliar o efeito de dois tipos de embalagens e do tratamento fungicida na qualidade de sementes de soja armazenadas. Sementes de soja das cultivares FT-Estrela e MT/BR 51 (Xingu), tratadas e não tratadas com os fungicidas tiofanato metílico, tolylfluanid, carbendazin e benomyl, foram armazenadas (em sacos de papel e em sacos de polietileno) em armazéns convencionais em Ponta Porã, MS e Rondonópolis, MT, respectivamente. Uma máquina da marca Amazone Transmix foi utilizada para fazer o tratamento. A cada 60 dias foram realizadas avaliações dos seguintes parâmetros: umidade das sementes, sanidade de sementes (blotter test), germinação padrão, vigor no tetrazólio, emergência em areia e emergência a campo. Não foi observado efeito negativo do tratamento com fungicida e do tipo de embalagem sobre a qualidade das sementes durante o período de armazenamento. De uma maneira geral, a germinação, o vigor das sementes e a emergência das plântulas foram mantidos durante o período de 180 dias de armazenamento. Observou-se melhor conservação das sementes tratadas com fungicidas durante o período em que elas ficaram armazenadas, em comparação às sementes não tratadas. Assim, ficou demonstrada a viabilidade técnica do tratamento de sementes de soja com fungicidas antes do armazenamento. Foi observada redução da germinação, emergência e vigor quando os fungicidas benzimidazóis (tiofanato metílico, carbendazin e benomyl) foram aplicados isoladamente às sementes de soja. Não foi observada variação significativa na umidade das sementes durante o período de armazenamento das mesmas.bitstream/item/69246/1/BP10-02-augusto.pd

    Viabilidade técnica do tratamento de sementes de soja com fungicidas antes do armazenamento.

    Get PDF
    bitstream/item/38715/1/BP19992.pd

    Non-equilibrium Studies in Switching Arc Plasmas in Japan

    Get PDF
    This paper briefly introduce research work examples of non-equilibrium studies in switching arcs. In understanding arc behavior, one often assumes local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) condition in the arc plasma. However, actual arc plasmas are not completely and not always in LTE state because of strong temperature change temporally and spatially, and high electric field application etc. Recently, we have a collaboration work in numerical simulations and experimental approaches for decaying arcs without LTE assumption. First, our numerical model is presented for decaying arcs without chemical equilibrium assumption. Secondly, two experimental methods are introduced for measuring electron density in decaying arcs without LTE assumption: Laser Thomson Scattering method and the Schack-Hartmann method. Finally, comparison results is shown between the LTE simulation, the chemically non-equilibrium simulation, and the above experimental measurements

    Reconfiguration of list edge-colorings in a graph

    Get PDF
    11th International Symposium, WADS 2009, Banff, Canada, August 21-23, 2009. ProceedingsWe study the problem of reconfiguring one list edge-coloring of a graph into another list edge-coloring by changing one edge color at a time, while at all times maintaining a list edge-coloring, given a list of allowed colors for each edge. First we show that this problem is PSPACE-complete, even for planar graphs of maximum degree 3 and just six colors. Then we consider the problem restricted to trees. We show that any list edge-coloring can be transformed into any other under the sufficient condition that the number of allowed colors for each edge is strictly larger than the degrees of both its endpoints. This sufficient condition is best possible in some sense. Our proof yields a polynomial-time algorithm that finds a transformation between two given list edge-colorings of a tree with n vertices using O(n [superscript 2]) recolor steps. This worst-case bound is tight: we give an infinite family of instances on paths that satisfy our sufficient condition and whose reconfiguration requires Ω(n [superscript 2]) recolor steps

    Characterization of a half-wave plate for cosmic microwave background circular polarization measurement with POLARBEAR

    Full text link
    A half-wave plate (HWP) is often used as a modulator to suppress systematic error in the measurements of cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization. A HWP can also be used to measure circular polarization (CP) through its optical leakage from CP to linear polarization. The CP of the CMB is predicted from various sources, such as interactions in the Universe and extension of the standard model. Interaction with supernova remnants of population III stars is one of the brightest CP sources. Thus, the observation of the CP of CMB is a new tool for searching for population III stars. In this paper, we demonstrate the improved measurement of the leakage coefficient using the transmission measurement of an actual HWP in the laboratory. We measured the transmittance of linearly polarized light through the HWP used in \textsc{Polarbear} in the frequency range of \SIrange{120}{160}{GHz}. We evaluate properties of the HWP by fitting the data with a physical model using the Markov Chain Monte Carlo method. We then estimate the band-averaged CP leakage coefficient using the physical model. We find that the leakage coefficient strongly depends on the spectra of CP sources. We thus calculate the maximum fractional leakage coefficient from CP to linear polarization as 0.133±0.0090.133 \pm 0.009 in the Rayleigh--Jeans spectrum. The nonzero value shows that \textsc{Polarbear} has sensitivity to CP. Additionally, because we use the bandpass of detectors installed in the telescope to calculate the band-averaged values, we also consider systematic effects in the experiment.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figure

    Extension of holomorphic functions and cohomology classes from non reduced analytic subvarieties

    Full text link
    The goal of this survey is to describe some recent results concerning the L 2 extension of holomorphic sections or cohomology classes with values in vector bundles satisfying weak semi-positivity properties. The results presented here are generalized versions of the Ohsawa-Takegoshi extension theorem, and borrow many techniques from the long series of papers by T. Ohsawa. The recent achievement that we want to point out is that the surjectivity property holds true for restriction morphisms to non necessarily reduced subvarieties, provided these are defined as zero varieties of multiplier ideal sheaves. The new idea involved to approach the existence problem is to make use of L 2 approximation in the Bochner-Kodaira technique. The extension results hold under curvature conditions that look pretty optimal. However, a major unsolved problem is to obtain natural (and hopefully best possible) L 2 estimates for the extension in the case of non reduced subvarieties -- the case when Y has singularities or several irreducible components is also a substantial issue.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1703.00292, arXiv:1510.0523

    Superconducting and structural properties of the type-I superconductor PdTe<sub>2</sub> under high pressure

    Get PDF
    The transition metal dichalcogenide PdTe2_2 has attractive features based on its classification as a type-II Dirac semimetal and the occurrence of type-I superconductivity, providing a platform for discussion of a topological superconductor. Our recent work revealed that type-I superconductivity persists up to pressures of 2.5\sim2.5 GPa and the superconducting transition temperature TcT_{\rm c} reaches a maximum at around 1 GPa, which is inconsistent with the theoretical prediction. To understand its non-monotonic variation and investigate superconductivity at higher pressures, we performed structural analysis by x-ray diffraction at room temperature below 8 GPa and electrical resistivity measurements at low temperatures from 1 to 8 GPa. With regard to the superconductivity beyond 1 GPa, the monotonic decrease in TcT_{\rm c} is reproduced without any noticeable anomalies; TcT_{\rm c} changes from 1.8 K at 1 GPa to 0.82 K at 5.5 GPa with dTc/dP0.22dT_{\rm c}/dP\sim-0.22 K/GPa. The crystal structure with spacegroup PP\={3}mm1 is stable in the pressure range we examined. On the other hand, the normalized pressure-strain analysis (finite strain analysis) indicates that the compressibility changes around 1 GPa, suggesting that a Lifshitz transition occurs. We here discuss the effect of pressure on the superconducting and structural properties based on the comparison of these experimental results
    corecore